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United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> KK (Failed Asylum Seeker) Libya CG [2004] UKIAT 00151 (27 May 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2004/00151.html Cite as: [2004] UKIAT 00151, [2004] UKIAT 151 |
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KK (Failed Asylum Seeker) Libya CG [2004] UKIAT 00151 (27 May 2004)
Date of hearing: 20 May 2004
Date Determination notified: 27 May 2004
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT | APPELLANT |
and | |
KK | RESPONDENT |
"It is plain that people who are suspected of serious involvement with anti-Libyan political groups are at risk in the event of their return. Then it is argued that there is evidence before us that this risk extends to everyone because the act of seeking asylum abroad is seen as an act against the government of Libya. It is plain that this cannot be right. The Dutch report shows people who have been returned as failed asylum seekers now going about their business in Libya. They had not being persecuted on their return and are not persecuted now. If it were the case that every failed asylum seeker was risk there would be no examples of people being returned safely. The examples of people being seriously ill treated all appear to relate to those who have been involved, or at least seriously suspected of being involved, in serious political activity or are radical Islamic supporters.
It must be the case that the bald assertion that any returned asylum seeker will be persecuted because they will be perceived as someone taking a stance against the government is wrong."
"In every case the Appellant assumes the burden of showing that the judgment appealed from is wrong. The burden so assumed is not the burden of proof normally carried by a claimant in first instance proceedings where there are factual disputes. An Appellant, if he is to succeed, must persuade the appeal court or tribunal not merely that a different view of the facts from that taken below is reasonable and possible, but that there are objective grounds upon which the court ought to conclude that a different view is the right one. The divide between these positions is not caught by the supposed difference between a perceived error and a disagreement. In either case the appeal court disagrees with the court below, and indeed may express itself in such terms. The true distinction is between the case where the court of appeal might prefer different view (perhaps on marginal grounds) and one where it concludes that the process of reasoning and the application of the relevant law, require it to adopt a different view. The burden which an Appellant assumes is to show that the case falls within this latter category."
Spencer Batiste
Vice-President